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Player | Action | Cards | Amount | Pot | Balance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
maxthomas | Small blind | £0.02 | £0.02 | £1.52 | |
IcemanKP | Big blind | £0.04 | £0.06 | £1.41 | |
Your hole cards |
| ||||
GaryLaud | Call | £0.04 | £0.10 | £2.12 | |
manmonkey | Raise | £0.08 | £0.18 | £4.27 | |
maxthomas | Fold | ||||
IcemanKP | Fold | ||||
GaryLaud | Call | £0.04 | £0.22 | £2.08 | |
Flop | |||||
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GaryLaud | Bet | £0.08 | £0.30 | £2.00 | |
manmonkey | Call | £0.08 | £0.38 | £4.19 | |
Turn | |||||
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GaryLaud | Bet | £0.32 | £0.70 | £1.68 | |
manmonkey | Call | £0.32 | £1.02 | £3.87 | |
River | |||||
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GaryLaud | Bet | £0.51 | £1.53 | £1.17 | |
manmonkey | Raise | £1.94 | £3.47 | £1.93 | |
GaryLaud | All-in | £1.17 | £4.64 | £0.00 | |
manmonkey | Unmatched bet | £0.26 | £4.38 | £2.19 | |
GaryLaud | Show |
| |||
manmonkey | Show |
| |||
manmonkey | Win | Four Kings | £4.05 |
Comments
Don't open limp pre. If you go watch that video of 4NL I made for you, you'll see I didn't limp pre once. Limping along can be fine with certain hands at these stakes... i.e. 3 people limp and we have A3s, great opportunity to just limp along imo because we don't get enough (any?) folds when we raise, we're dominated a lot when called and when we aint dominated everyone still has very good equity against us. Open limping, no.
Don't bet flop, just c/c. As played, we gotta barrel turn now but should be c/c again, maybe c/r depending on how bad villian is.
River is probably a fold, but it's 100% never ever a shove. I've said this to you before but you need to think about the relative strength of your hand not the actual strength. Most villians are very passive at 4NL so when they raise (especially when it's very big) they tend to have it... if they are somehow bluffing, why would you shove cos their bluffs can't call. Ok so now we're down to hands that raise for value.... QQ? no, AA? no. I wouldn't be surprised at all to see LOTS of flat calls if they do have the case ten, there's only 1 hand that will 100% raise for value and it's Kx
Name just ONE hand that the villian would raise huge on the river and call a shove with that is worse than our hand.
This is exactly what I mean about you needing to start looking at relative hand strength and not actual hand strength,
Actual hand strength = wow I have a FH, I've got the 4th best hand in poker
Relative hand strength = ok I've got a full house but it's a double paired board so FHs aren't very hard to make, and I have the worst possible FH (short of someone having 33). Would someone pay me off with AA/QQ when they know it's so easy for me to have a FH? You hand on this runout is not that strong, it's a bluff catcher really, and given people don't bluff that often at 4NL...
A very basic example...
if you had 22 and the board ran out K9KJK would you be going nuts to get all your money in, cos you've got a FH which is the 4th best hand in poker? No cos you know that you're beaten by any 8, any 9, any king, and any PP 33 thought to AA, and if you EVER get action on this board, it won't be from a hand worse than 22.
Re: short-stacking - I don't see that as being an unreasonable thing to do when you are a newer player, especially when you aren't sitting with a 'standard' bankroll (which is going to need to be a min of £80, 20 BI, and even that may be a bit too aggressive for someone who is learning?)
You need to adjust your ranges accordingly though, as if you're short-stacking you rarely have the implied odds to be calling with small pairs, suited connectors etc and have to play a much tighter range with a higher willingness to play for stacks pre or on the flop.
From UTG / MP you shouldn't really be playing anything other than premium pairs and AKs (and ALWAYS raising), maybe AKo/AQs/AQo/AJs/KQs.
From the blinds you pretty much want QQ+ / AKs and aim to get it all in pre-flop.
Later positions you should be looking for big cards that can flop top pair and then aim to get it all in post-flop asap (unless the flop is particularly scary looking - ie if you have JsTs and the flop comes AhTh9h, with a donk raise and call before you act).
I know there is some tweaking to those ranges, particularly as you play more and get more comfortable with reading oppos, but in short you need to play a much tighter range, much more aggressively.
And then in time, assuming you win, look to progress to playing 100bb stacks, rather than short-stacking at higher buy in levels.
So your bet isn't being called by much worse (33 and AA make up only 4/5 hand combos whereas Kx makes up a lot more hand combos (at least 8/9) I mean your bet probably has some value still but it might be more prudent to opt for a c/c if you think opponent is going to bluff with missed draws. (of which there are probably a lot of) When you bet and get raised though, what worse hands is villain raising with for value? Answer:None. He's always raising with Kx and just calling anything worse. So basically, your only hope is villain is bluffing - and at these stakes it's pretty unlikely in this situation.
You only want to play connecters likes J10 etc for a straight or flush, granted in this situation it's v hard to get away from it unless you apply more pressure on the turn to try and play your hand face up and rep pocket 10's. But at this level people constantly over play one pair.
Personally I think it's pretty unlucky and would play out differently at a higher stakes table where you could probably get someone off Kings.
Plus quads are probably the hardest hand to rep!
TIA